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      Back to Square None:  
	Netanyahu, Abbas to Resume 'Peace Process' that 
	Never Was  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 29, 2013 
	   The political peddlers, think-tank experts and media 
	professionals are all back in full force. They want us to believe that US 
	Secretary of State John Kerry has done what others have failed to do. On his 
	sixth trip to the Middle East during his post, and following intense shuttle 
	diplomacy likened to that of Henry Kissinger, Kerry managed to create a 
	modest common space between the Israeli government and the Palestinian 
	Authority (PA), thus securing their agreement to resume the so-called peace 
	process.   The media is focusing a great deal on how the 
	‘breakthrough’ happened, not on why or whether or not it was really a 
	‘breakthrough’ in the first place. It is typical in these ‘breaking news’ 
	dramas that the media inundates itself with excessive superfluous details, 
	while paying little heed to the underlying logic behind the entire story.
	   For now, we know this: Kerry announced from Amman on July 19 that 
	Palestinian and Israeli negotiators had put the groundwork in place to 
	resume frozen peace talks. They have been frozen since 2010 because Israel 
	refuses to stop illegal settlement construction in occupied Palestinian 
	land. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants to continue slicing up 
	the West Bank, fully control and isolate occupied East Jerusalem, build 
	illegal settlements, erect walls and cut down trees, while wining and dining 
	in some fancy Washington retreat, talking about peace and such.   But 
	why would Kerry even bother poking a stick in Netanyahu’s beehive in the 
	first place? One must consider the very tumultuous events that are currently 
	shattering the Middle East region – a military coup in Egypt, a civil war in 
	Syria, a return to major violence in Iraq, instability in Lebanon, and a 
	sectarian divide that has turned a wide chasm into a bottomless abyss. Isn’t 
	it better for the US to place its diplomatic energies elsewhere? Abbas and 
	Netanyahu are struggling with their own problems, so why are they playing 
	along in a game that will surely fail?   The answer is not simple and 
	cannot be readily expressed through catch phrases and sound bites, although, 
	some commentators are doing just that. Speaking on Israeli public radio, 
	Chico Menashe, said the return to negotiations is like “a half-baked cake 
	Kerry removed from the stove. Kerry convinced the Israelis and Palestinians 
	it was edible, and both sides agreed to eat it.” Natan Sachs, a fellow at 
	the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institute, was 
	quoted in the Jerusalem Post saying, both parties “basically agreed to 
	disagree, and to talk about that.”   And so the commentary teeters 
	between cautious optimism, high hopes, cynicism and creative metaphors. In 
	the final analysis, few truly understand this latest jumpstart of the ‘peace 
	process’, the political risks it entails, and why the show is likely to go 
	on for a while longer. Predictably, it will come to an abrupt ending 
	followed by a protracted blame game. Knowing how mainstream western media 
	operates, Palestinians will likely be the party responsible for the failure 
	of the talks that are yet to start.    But here are some interesting 
	points that must be considered firstly concerning the Americans. The Middle 
	East region is in a constant influx, between revolutions, counter 
	revolutions and war. Neither the US, nor its traditional allies are able to 
	sway the outcomes in their favor. Neither money, nor arms, nor any political 
	grand scheme is achieving much.   Since the US withdrawal from Iraq in 
	2010, the US has suffered many blows. Its status as the uncontended 
	superpower is in shambles, and its allies have been caught in the wake of 
	the so-called Arab Spring. Despite attempts at meddling, enticing some 
	parties with money, and inciting violence against others, there are no 
	tangible outcomes that promise to take the region back to an era of 
	‘political stability’, as in the same old status quo, that of political 
	stagnation under US stewardship.   To repair its image, the US has to 
	get reengaged in the Middle East. President Barack Obama’s administration, 
	besieged by a dysfunctional Congress at home, is barely relevant in the 
	Middle East anymore, with Russia, France, Britain, Turkey, and even China 
	making headway. Resuming the ‘peace process’ is necessary to give the US a 
	chance to claim leadership in a leaderless region.   Second, 
	concerning the Israelis, Netanyahu’s rightwing-dominated coalition 
	government might have looked as the ideal scenario for a rightwing 
	politician who based his career on his love affair with armed settlers and 
	his unmitigated detestation of the United Nations and international law, 
	which he never thinks should apply to Israel. However, being firmly 
	positioned in the rightwing circle has proven to be a public relations 
	disaster.   Even his ever-supportive and malleable European allies are 
	now turning against him. Europe can no longer be seen as an unconditional 
	Israeli backer while pacifying its own populations, the majority of whom 
	don’t tolerate Israel’s occupation, sieges and violent behavior. If 
	Netanyahu has his domestic audiences to appease, EU countries do too. The 
	writing on the wall became even clearer on July 16, when the Israeli 
	newspaper Haaretz reported on the publication of an EU directive that paves 
	the road for complete boycott of Israel’s illegal Jewish settlements in the 
	West Bank and East Jerusalem. The directive, which will become effective Jan 
	1, 2014, is binding. It forbids any EU funding or cooperating with any 
	entity that operates in “the territories occupied by Israel since 1967 
	(which) comprise the Golan Heights, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, 
	including East Jerusalem.” Although grossly belated, the EU move is truly 
	unprecedented and deserving of the ‘earthquake’ depiction made by a senior 
	Israeli official. The EU directive was described by Economy Minister Naftali 
	Bennett with palpable hysteria as an “economic terror attack.”   
	Israel is in desperate need to remold its scruffy image which has resulted 
	from too many bombs, damming evidence of war crimes, and arrogant speeches 
	made by numerous politicians. Any ‘peace process’ at this time would indeed 
	do Israel’s image some good, although it will make no lasting difference. 
	  Lastly, the Palestinian Authority, an entity that was created with 
	Israeli consent, and funded by US-led donor countries, cannot operate 
	outside the US political sphere. According to a reading of the just 
	published annual report by the Palestinian Monitory Authority, as reported 
	by Ma'an news agency, the West Bank economic indicators for 2012 were 
	terrible, and prospects for the next two years are even worse. The PA has no 
	political vision, and even if it did, it is too overwhelmed by economic 
	dependency to act as a self-respecting political entity. The PA has to play 
	the game, fully knowing that the game has been rigged from the very start. 
	   All three parties know this very well, but they are willing to return 
	to the negotiations table. Any table will do while they pause for photos, 
	smile and shake hands over and over. By doing so, a media circus made of 
	experts will resume, are ready with metaphors, clichés and sound bites, as 
	long as they are crammed into 30 seconds or less.   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is: My Father was A Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press). 
	  
       
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